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Amb. Marc Ginsberg

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A Field Guide to the Middle East Mess, Part I

Posted: 09/19/2012 8:29 am

Shocked and confused are the two words that sum up the collective reaction of Middle East analysts to the nahkba (catastrophe) gripping the region and the broader Muslim world since news leaked out over the dastardly Innocence of Muslims video.

Trying to sort through the rampant anti-Americanism that has been unleashed when news broke of the video's content has become a psycho-errant errand into the unknown for most of us... so perhaps it is best to go back to the drawing board and try to make some sense of these events:

Was This So-Called "Arab Spring" a Misnomer?

Absolutely! Of the 22 members of the Arab League (19 actually in the Middle East; three in Africa (Somalia, Djibouti and Comoros), there have been only four actual "top-down" revolutions: two have been bloody revolts involving military conflicts (Libya and Yemen) and two have been "soft, people power" revolts (Egypt and Tunisia). A fifth (in Syria) is proving to be the bloodiest and the most protracted with no end in sight. The existing Arab monarchs in Morocco, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Qatar, Kuwait, Jordan and Bahrain are still on their thrones and likely to remain so for the foreseeable future). Those in the know no longer dare refer to these transitions as "spring-like." No one has come up with a more appropriate moniker to capture the essence of the titanic shifts that have many more acts to follow.

Are Islamist Movements Hijacking "Democratic Revolutions"?

Although political Islam is on the march in the Middle East, each Islamic party has its national identity and social restraints. Most of these Islamist parties that have gained power are offspring of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood. For example, Morocco elected an the Islamist Justice and Development Party, largely modeled after the Turkish Islamist party of the same name; in Tunisia, the Islamist Ennahda Party is the dominant party in a broader coalition that includes secular Tunisians. Libyans rejected a Muslim Brotherhood-oriented party for a more secular government, but are having to contend with a Muslim Mafia extremist group affiliated with Al Qaeda in the Maghreb which in all likelihood masterminded the assassination of U.S. Amb. Stevens. Of course, Egypt is ground zero for the Muslim Brothers, who would have been in control of Egypt in since 1952 but for Col. Nasser outsmarting its leaders after they collaborated to overthrow King Farouk. The dominant political opposition to Syria's Assad are members of Syria's Muslim Brotherhood movement. And Jordan is contending with a new resurgence of its own Muslim Brotherhood movement.

Based on the political dynamics at work, the Arab world is witnessing a regional resurgence of a "united states of Muslim Brothers" with enormous ramifications for the U.S. and the region.

If Egypt, According to Obama, Is "Neither an Ally or an Enemy," Then What Is It?

Based on current U.S. policy definitions, Egypt is considered an ally. But pull aside the curtain on Arabic websites affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood and its Salafist allies and you'll see that Washington's default desire to offer U.S. patronage to the new leadership of Egypt is fraught with failed expectations. It would be patently naive for Americans to delude themselves into believing that the newly elected President Mohamed Morsi is his own boss. On the contrary, Morsi is a mere figurehead who takes orders and executes his intolerant masters' instructions, rather than issues them.

The Muslim Brotherhood's dynastic structure is virulently anti-American. Morsi, is a charismatically-challenged appendage of this Muslim Brotherhood and takes his marching orders from the Brotherhood's Guidance Bureau and from Supreme Guide Mohamed Badie, the Muslim Brotherhood's Egyptian equivalent of Ayatollah Khamenei. Badie is an unadulterated Islamic extremist who uses the vocabulary of jihad freely. His Arabic rants are replete with denunciations of the United States and calls to wage a war of liberation against Israel.

Many in the west would like to seductively believe the Brothers will modify their theology and ideology now that they control most of Egypt's governing institutions and the responsibilities that accompany them. But in the competition for Egyptian hearts and minds, the Brothers are fighting for political supremacy against the unadulterated Islamic haters to their right -- the Salafists who conveniently found in the video a weapon to whip up a frenzy by a few to prove they, rather then the Brothers, are the true protectors of the faith.

In this struggle, it was not by accident that it was a Brotherhood-supported Egyptian website that egged on the attack on the U.S. embassy in Cairo on September 9th to "commemorate" on the 9/11 anniversary the imprisonment of their cherished blind Sheikh Rahman in U.S. jail for masterminding the 1993 World Trade Center attack. I actually take the time to read these sites regularly and what the Brotherhood states on its English websites is thin gruel to the more extremist gusto gushing out their Arabic websites on the very same subjects.

The U.S. provides Egypt with $1.3 billion in annual military aid and $250 million in economic assistance, none of which actually matter in the scheme of things to Morsi or his Brotherhood patrons, who are far more interested in the $1 billion in debt relief Morsi has negotiated with the Obama administration to provide the jobs and bread voters demand. In exchange for what, I may ask? Without firm, resolute strings attached, debt relief is money down the drain for U.S. policy aspirations in Egypt. Egypt is embarking on a mission to define a new foreign policy that represents an about-face from what we have seen in the past. Sadly, debt relief -- both American and multilateral, is the only real leverage we have over this government to reboot this transitory bilateral tie.

When Did the U.S. State Dept. Find Out About the Inflammatory Innocent of Muslims (IOM) Video?

IOM was filmed in Los Angeles in August 2011. Nothing so far has appeared in the press indicating that senior officials of the U.S. State Department had prior knowledge of IOM before it appeared on YouTube. However, the sheer lightning speed of the video's adverse impact on the security of U.S. diplomatic installations compels an internal investigation to determine whether there was prior knowledge of the video and what actions, if any, were taken or not taken once the video's appearance sparked the protests.

U.S. State Dept. Officials Dispute Media Reports That the Attack on the Benghazi Consulate Was Premeditated

Why the State Department is trying to obfuscate the source of the attack on Amb. Stevens is a mystery to the media. The Libyan government has officially stated that the attack on Amb. Stevens began as an unruly mob of punks and Islamic extremists attacked the U.S. Consulate in a first wave, which was followed by a more concerted, premeditated attack on the Ambassador's convoy by militants from Ansar al Sharia, an appendage of Al Qaeda in the Mahgreb, which embraces Saudi Wahhabi theology and is based in Benghazi, which has previously targeted the British ambassador and other foreign diplomats in Libya.

In all likelihood, the State Department's reluctance to come forward and acknowledge the genesis of the attack is due to the fact that, by eyewitness accounts, Amb. Stevens was under-protected given the well-known danger to foreigners in Benghazi from these extremist Islamic organizations. As a former ambassador, I know that diplomatic security decisions are not an ambassador's decision alone, but the decision of the Regional Security Officer (RSO) and the Bureau of Diplomatic Security. Whether there was a miscalculation or not by these operations warrants investigation.

Is the Arab World More Anti-American Under Obama than Under Bush?

In an eye-popping survey issued on June 13, 2012 the Pew Research Global Attitudes Project sadly reveals that despite President Obama's much heralded Muslim world outreach speech in Cairo in June 2009, anti-U.S. attitudes have sharply escalated in key regional nations. It was predictable (see my article in Foreign Policy "Fulfilling the Promises of Cairo" dated November 11, 2009). Fewer than one-in-five have a positive opinion about U.S. policies in Egypt (19%), Turkey (15%), and Jordan (12%). The U.S. has better scores in Lebanon, Libya and Tunisia (yet in the latter, the mobs ransacked the spanking new American Cooperative School last week that was largely educating Tunisians). And it's not only a big negative toward U.S. policies. In one of the most disturbing findings from the Pew Center, even average Americans have become decidedly disliked (Turkey 69%, Egypt 62%, and Jordan 67%).

What explains this deterioration in attitudes? Fundamental disagreements over values and policies as well as pervasive conspiracy theories and shopworn misperceptions that the U.S. still masterminds events in the region against Islam and its adherents. When the lid came off the boiling revolutionary pot, this is the stew that had been largely hidden by the region's dictators.

Ever since the first embers of revolution were ignited in Tunisia over two years ago, U.S. Middle East policy has been adrift, unable to navigate between a desire to promote responsible change, as well as unable to influence the intolerance that such change is fostering. The riots and attendant outbreak of anti-U.S. violence compels a much needed reassessment that brings into plain view what must be done to protect fundamental U.S. interests. In other words, it's time for the president's staff to make a mid-course correction and confront the sad reality that despite President Obama's Cairo visit, U.S. policies have failed to fulfill any tangible Arab expectations (except in Libya) and the consequences are real and painful to behold.

In the wake of these protests, it would be inexcusable to conclude that all is lost for the U.S. in the Arab world. The silent majority of Arabs do not condone attacks on U.S. embassies or approve of these antics according to local commentaries and bloggers. Neither are they eager to be victimized into submission by Islamic extremist ideology. They know what the ayatollahs and the Taliban are capable of doing and want no part of it. There are so many acts to follow in these regional dramas and no one has a clue where events will head. But we cannot high-tail it home and ignore how important these changes will affect us and out allies.

This latest cycle of anti-American outrage is symptomatic of a broader problem facing Arabs -- that these revolutions have brought neither jobs nor bread. Ultimately, these Islamist parties could become discredited under the weight of their own shortcomings of intolerance and a failure to deliver the goods. This cycle already happened in Jordan years ago when Jordanians voted the Islamists out of power. It could happen again, which is why we cannot give up promoting the creation of democratic institutions in this turbulent region and working hard to preserve vital American interests.

It is a lesson that should not be lost on Washington.

 

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Shocked and confused are the two words that sum up the collective reaction of Middle East analysts to the nahkba (catastrophe) gripping the region and the broader Muslim world since news leaked out ov...
Shocked and confused are the two words that sum up the collective reaction of Middle East analysts to the nahkba (catastrophe) gripping the region and the broader Muslim world since news leaked out ov...
 
 
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01:01 AM on 09/22/2012
The problem is that the Arab world no longer respects America. Thanks to the disastrous apology tour and the Cairo speech, we have zero credibility in the region.
11:22 AM on 09/20/2012
Good Articel from the AMB. I would like to point out the most important point the Ambassador touched upon and that is the Salafist movement and the Saudi connection. We need to expose that fact to the American and other western nations. Why the American government refuses to touch upon that is beyond comprehension. Just to give you an idea of what is happening in Syria, there are flights out of Pakistan by the dozens, flying Salafists to fight Syrian governement. These are the same people we are killing in Pakistan by using our drones. The Saudi government along with the other UAE wahabi sects are fueling this uprising and also bank rolling it. This will come back and bite Turkey in the rear as soon as Bashar al assad is taken down.

http://criticalppp.com/archives/228226,
I would like to urge all reader to please read the above article, written by independent people who are eye witness to this mess.......
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wisdo
semantics shamantics
07:24 AM on 09/21/2012
The wahabists in Saudi Arabia, and their connection to Al Kaida is well known. In fact Michael Moores hit documentary Farenheit 911 made that very clear to Americans. I think its also quite clear why nothing is done about it. The reason is petrodollars and oil, but also the close personal relationships between our billionaire caste (esp. in Houston) and the house of Saud. Its business, but its also personal. A lot of people need to go to jail in this country but their money protects them, and neither the republicans nor the Democrats will ever do anything about it, since thats who gives them their marching orders.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
umish
Religion, the curse of mankind
09:47 AM on 09/20/2012
good article...... may i suggest this one too.... for the readers to understand the mentality of what we are dealing with http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/
The Peace Process: View from the West Bank by Hisham Jarallah
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Richard Genco
10:27 AM on 09/20/2012
No Marines for Libyan Ambassador, Full Security Detail for Valerie ...Explain this mentality please.
01:01 AM on 09/22/2012
Excellent question.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NTT
Fighting rants with facts
09:36 AM on 09/20/2012
Superb analysis!

>>>"Ultimately, these Islamist parties could become discredited under the weight of their own shortcomings of intolerance and a failure to deliver the goods."

Precisely, but with one proviso: that we do not let ourselves be persuaded (by either the pretense of "moderation" or the threat of violence) to provide help to Islamist regimes, which are fundamentally opposed to the cause of freedom, democracy & enlightenment.
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Wisdo
semantics shamantics
07:33 AM on 09/21/2012
"to Islamist regimes, which are fundamentally opposed to the cause of freedom, democracy & enlightenment"

Says you. Most of them just want aan economic system which dos not allow interest to be charged by banks (they consider it usury). Some, like the Taliban, are full-on hardcore lunatics. Some, like in the UAE, are progressive and at least as "enlightened" as the US which has massive inequalities and injustices. Also more muslim countries (Turkey, Indonesia, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Senegal, Kyrgyzstan) have had female presidents than the US has ever had - which is none, ever.

As o the charge that they do not promote democracy. Well neither do we. We prop up dictators (Saudi, Egypt, Uzbekistan), we install dictators (Iraq, Iran, Venezuela) We have a history of violently suppressing democratic movements like trade unions in South America even being host to a death squad training school called the School of the Americas, so before throwing stones, examine the composition of your own house.
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NTT
Fighting rants with facts
09:12 AM on 09/21/2012
You know, I don't have to provide a rebuttal to your comment, you did it yourself. The first half of your pro-Islamist comment tries to argue: "No, they are not against USA"; the second half, however, says "USA is bad", accusing her of half very old-half imaginary deeds -- and contains the very amusing hint that USA should learn women rights from the likes of Turkey, Indonesia, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Senegal, Kyrgyzstan.

So which is it, Wisdo (clearly no M there!): "They are not against America" or "They are right to be against America"? I'll let you think about it and come up with a (hopefully, 'coz I'm bored!) more consistent "argument". THEN I'll demolish it.
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4eva
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09:14 AM on 09/20/2012
Why can they not create their own jobs and make their own bread?
08:06 AM on 09/20/2012
If they dont like our policies then we should stop giving them millions of US tax dollars. Unfortunately, it is not as simple as that, but it is a shame we give a lot of these countries, especially Egypt, 100s of millions of dollars and their people despise us. These countries will never have the freedom they are looking for without a truly free media. I will wait and see what happens.
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Boduognat
Lasciate ogne speranza, voi ch'entrate.
02:44 PM on 09/20/2012
"If they dont like our policies then we should stop giving them millions "

euhhh.... you're actually not giving "them" millions.

In your own example, Egypt, the Dictator Mubarak indeed received millions from the USA, but rather than advance the life of his people, these millions were spent on the US Military Market, which helped Mubarak develop a modern military and security apparatus, in which a privileged elite called the shots, allowing him to rule his people with an iron fist.

If it were up to the USA, these people would indeed still be without any freedom, but as you may remember, they disposed of their Dictator last year, even though Hillary Clinton urged them to "go home" as they "have had their say" on Tahrir Square.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Donald McBee
06:58 PM on 09/20/2012
Is Sharia law freedom?
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balamo
07:39 AM on 09/20/2012
the Catastrophe in arabic is ' el-naqba'..., 'nakhba' which appears in the second line above, means something chosen.

this has been the problem with the american foreign service - mediocre or no language skills...and despite those lack of skills, a penchant for forming policy!

if you are going to include arabic names in your text to sound erudite mr. ambassador, at least get them right...
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NTT
Fighting rants with facts
10:01 AM on 09/20/2012
Balderdash. It's nakba, not naqba, because one writes (and pronounces) a kāf , not a qāf! There is no universally accepted system of transliteration from Arabic into English, but all the common transliteration systems agree on that particular issue. If you are going to make linguistic comments trying to sound erudite, you should get your facts right.
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balamo
03:43 PM on 09/20/2012
you are right ntt, it is kaf and not qaf! it was early and i made a mistake...

difference is, i am a photographer who learned to speak arabic and persian, not a former united states ambassador re-tooling his career as an analyst and writing policy articles on the HP.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sam Damon
Do or do not, there is no try.
06:48 AM on 09/20/2012
A very concise and accurate run down of major issues and causes in the Muslim world. Two points of emphasis on the consulate attack and the overall under current in the region. First, the attack on Amb. Stevens was a well planned and executed operation by AQ. Forget the WH spin to protect BO's foreign policy talking points. Just as when Qaddafi was captured and killed, Amb. Stevens was brutally tortured before his death. Second, plain and simple this is about religion, moreover the irreconcilable incompatibility of western values/morals and the manner in which many Muslims practice Islam. unfortunately these extremists are increasingly coming to power across the region. Perhaps moderate Muslims in these countries will do something about it, but probably not - except maybe in Libya. In the end we will have to deal with this head on. So all the US apologists can save their breath about we just need to be nicer. Its way past that.
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11:13 AM on 09/20/2012
"Just as when Qaddafi was captured and killed, Amb. Stevens was brutally tortured before his death."

The mob used to be NATO's ground force supported by the US.
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Sam Damon
Do or do not, there is no try.
01:32 PM on 09/20/2012
Well sort of, more like NATO/US was their support. What is your point? Disappointed we got in bed with some unsavory cats? Such is the big leagues.
05:41 AM on 09/20/2012
Much as I would like to pin the problem on religion, or education, the real problem is that people are not taught, or encouraged to think for themselves. Independent thought is a threat to dictators, and religion, hence you have an unholy alliance between the two that conspires to keep the population educated enough to read the Koran, but not to think for themselves. Independent thought and science is what originally blessed the Muslim world, but which has been lost to them as it came to the West. What we are witnessing is a process, a messy process, where eventually these people will throw off their kings and pseudo kings, and think for themselves. Perhaps when the world stops buying their oil and they have to innovate to survive.
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Wisdo
semantics shamantics
06:20 AM on 09/20/2012
" the real problem is that people are not taught, or encouraged to think for themselves"

THat goes double for this country.

Why did we invade Iraq? Why did even our president not know about things like Sunni and Shia Islam so that we could be prepared for the inevitable civil war? Why do we applaud ignorance in our popular culture? Knowlegable people are derided as "geeks" as misfits. Why are our news stations the equivalent of British tabloids, all shouting and ignorant race-baiting and celebrity gossip?

The world buys their oil cheaply because we need it and for years we've been able to set the price at the barrel of a gun. The ordinary Achmed Soap never saw any of the money.
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Jeremy Bursac
You're not the bossa nova me.
04:13 PM on 09/20/2012
The US invaded Iraq (and a lot more) and here we a foreign service professional ruminating upon why the US is not popular in that region....
08:10 AM on 09/20/2012
Exactly! And their media is controlled by their govts thus they are a seriously unformed people. In an interview on NPR with a journalist in Cairo he said that a lot of Libyans he spoke with, including highly educated ones, were shocked that the US govt would not or could not block the release of the youtube video and therefore thought the govt must have had something to do with its release. That is how little they know about American democracy and the rights we have. They have no concept of what it means to have rights like that.

IMO, they are very far away from true democracy, which would require a truly free media.
09:03 AM on 09/20/2012
I think you have it right. I would add that a true democratic republic (we do not have a democracy in the USA except in certain parts of Connecticut and Vermont at the municipal level where the legislature that approves budgets, school expenses, etc. is a Town Meeting of all the electors in the Town) a lot is required of citizens. You cannot have a real republic until you have near universal literacy, the rule of law, an independent judiciary, trial by jury, a free press, separation of church and state, universal adult suffrage, economic and social mobility, and a culture that buys into democratic governance. The countries of the Arab Spring are a long ways away, but one has to start somewhere, and getting rid of rule by a strongman is a good first step. I know separation of church and state will rankle some people, but with what is happening in the middle east, well, the thing speaks for itself.
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Wisdo
semantics shamantics
05:33 AM on 09/20/2012
"In an eye-popping survey issued on June 13, 2012 the Pew Research Global Attitudes Project sadly reveals that despite President Obama's much heralded Muslim world outreach speech in Cairo in June 2009, anti-U.S. attitudes have sharply escalated in key regional nations."

Thats hardly surprising given that it was all talk and no action. The tough talk about curbing Israels ongoing "settlement program" or ethnic cleansing to call a spade a spade, turned into a whimper rather sharply. The spectacle of Obama using the US veto in opposition to a UN resolution condemning the settlements - a position he held himself and a position the United States holds in theory, if not in practice proved that this administration is really no different from the last one in terms of one-sided support for Israel, no matter what the cost to everyone else.

True, the arab worlds Dictators kept a lid on much of the hatred for the US, but therein lies the reason for much of this hatred. US meddling, including propping up dictators has meant that there is no love for the US despite our generous patronage of autocratic brutality. In fact over the last half century The US has only ever made enemies of these people, shooting down passenger aircraft, supporting Israels really barbaric colonial policy, shelling lebanon, invading Iraq and Afghanistan, torturing, killing and generally being unpleasant. Why should they think we mean them well? We dont.
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Jeremy Bursac
You're not the bossa nova me.
04:14 PM on 09/20/2012
No, no, didn't read the poor, dear Ambassador's piece? The things you ramble on about are "conspiracy theories."
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Paperless Tiger
05:08 AM on 09/20/2012
"... these revolutions have brought neither jobs nor bread."

That's because they are not revolutions. They are counter-revolutions against the revolutionary governments. The involvement of outside forces including the Gulf monarchies, USA, and NATO can hardly be missed. The new reactionary governments are tenuous at best, as we have seen in Libya. The real revolutions are brewing in Saudi Arabia and its satellites, where the feudal monarchies have become an anachronism.
04:57 AM on 09/20/2012
The rise of Islamist power bodes ill for the emergence of a peaceful, viable, sustainable, rational, and compassionate United Earth. Anyone who truly believes in the values that make liberal democracy possible (I speak here of Western Europe, particularly Scandinavia and Holland, as well as the better elements of the US) should be quite alarmed at current developments. Much of the Middle East is like medieval Europe, only with access to modern technology.
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04:19 AM on 09/20/2012
If you are honestly curious about how American Middle East policy became such a disaster you need not look further than Marc Ginsberg's career in government.
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balamo
07:40 AM on 09/20/2012
well put!
09:11 AM on 09/20/2012
Well said neo-cons like him lying us into the Iraqi war has been a disaster for our country.
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davidprosser
03:07 AM on 09/20/2012
The world has become an interconnected and interdependent mess. It doesn't have to be this way, but without education, the state of the world is as-it-is--it is a place where we are completely tied together but ignorant of our ties, how we benefit and harm one another.

Our world as a result is in crisis. We can see this clearly in the realm of economics (a global crisis since 2008), climate change, education, the continual disintegration of community, and increasingly problematic international relations.

Education is the key here. It isn't simply that the Arab world is ignorant of its social, economic, etc. ties to the rest of the world. It is also us. As a result, new education is sorely needed, to show us how we are interconnected and interdependent, and why this prompts the need for the development of mutual responsibility.

Otherwise? How can global problems be conquered today? As we can see, they clearly aren't under the current, "My nation vs. your nation" paradigm. How can they, when the world is now interconnected and interdependent?
04:58 AM on 09/20/2012
I'm all for a rational, compassionate, viable United Earth. We are SO far from that in our era.
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Wisdo
semantics shamantics
05:44 AM on 09/20/2012
Education, like charity, starts at home.
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yintwin
07:24 PM on 09/21/2012
Sadly its not enough these days, with society, advertising, movies and television all telling us the 'appropriate' way to act. Who decided to make society this way, while we just sat by and watched? If we want a chance at change, then we need to start creating pockets of society that reflect the values the world needs. I personally am tired of all the silly school movies where its the 'cool' kids against the 'nerds'. How has this added to the fracturing of society? The biggest addition has been to the profit margins of the corporations who sell the items that you need to be a 'cool kid'. Isn't it time to embrace values such as collaboration and caring, working together, recognizing when we are being 'petty' and rising above that? We learn so many things on this planet, but 'till now we have not learned how to be truly 'human'. We need to bring back trust - and that is no simple task.
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Crisdean Wulver
We've got our priorities screwed up.
02:27 AM on 09/20/2012
I vote for the Huffington Post to post this article to the top of the page and make it the lead. I can't understand why they don't see that it deserves to be there. I guess it's because it's what's known as an "opinion piece," and those are usually on the last two pages of the front section of a newspaper. But I think they should break with tradition in this case and post it at the top.